W.C.M. v. M.P. (Appeal from Baldwin Juvenile Court: JU-19-510.02).

CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedMay 23, 2025
DocketCL-2023-0615
StatusPublished

This text of W.C.M. v. M.P. (Appeal from Baldwin Juvenile Court: JU-19-510.02). (W.C.M. v. M.P. (Appeal from Baldwin Juvenile Court: JU-19-510.02).) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W.C.M. v. M.P. (Appeal from Baldwin Juvenile Court: JU-19-510.02)., (Ala. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Rel: May 23, 2025

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.

ALABAMA COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS OCTOBER TERM, 2024-2025 _________________________

CL-2023-0615 _________________________

W.C.M.

v.

M.P.

Appeal from Baldwin Juvenile Court (JU-19-510.02)

After Remand from the Alabama Supreme Court

PER CURIAM.

This court's reversal of the judgment of the Baldwin Juvenile Court

("the juvenile court") terminating the parental rights of W.C.M. ("the

father"), see W.C.M. v. M.P., [Ms. CL-2023-0615, July 19, 2024] ___ So.

3d ___ (Ala. Civ. App. 2024), has been reversed by our supreme court and CL-2023-0615

the case has been remanded to this court for further consideration of the

arguments raised by the father relating to the juvenile court's finding of

abandonment and its determination that no viable alternatives to the

termination of his parental rights existed. Ex parte M.P., [Ms. SC-2024-

0684, Mar. 7, 2025] ___ So. 3d ___ (Ala. 2025).

We set out the procedural history and most of the facts relevant to

the issues on appeal in W.C.M.:

"In July 2021, M.P. ('the mother') filed in the … the juvenile court … a petition seeking to terminate the parental rights of … the father … to E.H.P. ('the child'), who had been conceived outside of wedlock. After a trial held over four sessions in August 2021, September 2021, and July 2023, the juvenile court entered a judgment terminating the father's parental rights. The father filed a postjudgment motion directed to that judgment that the juvenile court denied. The father then filed a timely notice of appeal to this court.

"….

"The record reflects that the mother filed a paternity and child-support action in 2015, shortly after the child was born. During that action, which was still pending at the time of the entry of the termination-of-parental-rights judgment,1 the parties had twice operated under different temporary agreements setting out the father's right to visit with the child, one of which required the father to pay certain sums to the mother for child support. During the pendency of the paternity and child-support action, the father filed motions seeking to compel the mother to allow him the visitation that was set out in the temporary agreements, and, in two separate orders in 2017, the juvenile court required the mother to take

2 CL-2023-0615

appropriate actions to permit the father to exercise his visitation. The record indicates that the father exercised the visitation that he was provided in the temporary agreements. However, as of the time of the filing of the termination-of- parental rights action, no agreement or order of the juvenile court provided visitation rights to the father or governed child support. The mother had filed a previous termination-of- parental-rights action in 2019 but the juvenile court declined to terminate the father's parental rights at that time.

"The mother testified that, after the 2019 termination- of-parental-rights action was concluded in November 2019, she had made efforts to provide opportunities for the father to visit with the child. She explained that she had arranged for the father to see the child each Thursday by picking up the father so that she, he, and the child could have dinner at a restaurant together.2 Although the mother said that the father had initially participated in the mother's attempts to provide opportunities for him to visit the child, she said that later he began requesting that some of the visits be rescheduled. She testified that she had attempted to accommodate the father's requests. According to the mother, in January 2020, the father informed her that he was unable to visit because he had begun working in Florida. The mother said that she had offered to take the child to visit the father in Florida in January 2020 but that he had declined her offer because he had the flu. The mother testified that, at some point in or after January 2020, she would drop the child off at the home of the father's parents ('the paternal grandparents') on Thursday evenings so that the father could visit and have dinner with the child.

"According to the mother, after the father began working in Florida, he had informed her that she could come and pick the child up an hour early from some of the Thursday visits at the paternal grandparents' house because, she said, he had told her that he had to return to Florida. She testified that the father had declined a visit on March 19, 2020,

3 CL-2023-0615

because, she said, he had told her that he feared that he had been exposed to the virus that causes 'COVID-19.' She said that he had not visited the child in April 2020 or May 2020; however, she indicated that the father had spoken to the child via FaceTime, a videoconferencing application, on April 1, 2020, and April 4, 2020. She testified that the father had texted her on May 8, 2020, but, she said, he had not asked about the child or requested a visit at that time. The mother further testified that the father had contacted her about the child's dance recital in late June 2020, but, she said, he had ultimately decided that he could not attend. She said that he had telephoned her to arrange to FaceTime with the child on July 1, 2020, the date of the child's birthday, but, the mother explained, he had not completed the FaceTime call at the arranged time because he had instead texted her about some information relating to a recent filing in the pending paternity and child-support action. The mother testified that the father had not made any further attempt to contact the child until she filed the termination-of-parental-rights action in 2021.

"The mother testified that she had also begun allowing the child to visit regularly with the paternal grandparents on Sundays. The mother further testified that the child had seen the father during a visit with the paternal grandparents in August 2020 and that the father had engaged in a FaceTime call with the child during a visit with the paternal grandparents in January 2021. The mother described the child as having been 'upset' after both contacts with the father. Regarding the August 2020 visit, the mother stated that she herself had been upset because she had not been able to 'prepare [the child] for that' and described the child as having been 'confused' and 'upset' because, the mother testified, '[the child] wanted to just go over and play with [the paternal grandmother].' The mother stated that '[the child] was upset [in January 2021] because you can't just dip out on somebody for months and then just FaceTime them, you know.' As a result of the father's attempt to contact the child when she was visiting with the paternal grandparents in

4 CL-2023-0615

January 2021, the mother testified that she had ended the child's Sunday visits with them because of what she described as her 'mistrust.'

"The mother also testified that the father had not been paying child support. She said that he had paid $600 per month over four months in 2020.

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Bluebook (online)
W.C.M. v. M.P. (Appeal from Baldwin Juvenile Court: JU-19-510.02)., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wcm-v-mp-appeal-from-baldwin-juvenile-court-ju-19-51002-alacivapp-2025.